Excerpted
from Emmanuel Konde’s Cameroon: Traumas
of the Body Politic (2015), pp. 104-108
Professor Emmanuel Konde (Author) |
CHAPTER 5
Ahidjo’s Decolonized Cameroon
Modern
decolonized Cameroon was largely shaped by two momentous events of 1958: one in
French Cameroun and the other in British Southern Cameroons. Originating in the late colonial era,
reverberations of these events are still echoing in the postcolonial epoch of
Cameroon’s political history and are simultaneously contributing to the
political discourse of the country and raising difficult questions about the
past. This chapter examines and analyzes the political impact of these
developments in the French and the British administered United Nations trust
territories of Cameroon, through the federal and united republics. The most significant political figure that
dominated this period of Cameroon’s history was Ahmadou Ahidjo, first president
of reunified Cameroon who loomed larger than life during the first two decades
(1961 to 1982) of the federal and united republics.
Ahmadou Ahidjo |
Whereas
in French Cameroun Ahmadou Ahidjo had emerged in 1958 with the support of
diverse political parties in the assembly, in British Southern Cameroons John
N. Foncha's rise in 1959 resulted from a political machination of diabolical
proportions orchestrated by Augustine N. Jua.
The anlu of 1958 assured the
K.N.D.P. a short-term victory at the polls but also sowed some long-term seeds
of discord that would later blossom into the much vaunted "Anglophone
Problem." In reality, the so-called
Anglophone Problem was born during the nationalist phase of British Southern
Cameroons’ agitation for autonomy in the 1950s.
It arose out of division among coastal and Grassfields English-speaking
Cameroonian politicians, crystallized in 1958 after the anlu, ands ossified in the 1959 elections that resulted in Foncha
victory over Endeley. At the time not
readily apparent, these events of the 1950s created political havoc that would
bedevil English-speaking Cameroonians in the last decade of the twentieth
century and early years of the twenty-first.
Whether
for good or worse, the new realignment occasioned by the events of 1958 meant
that in French Cameroun Ahmadou Ahidjo's Union
Camerounais (U.C.) eventually would
rise to be the party calling the shots there, while in British Southern
Cameroons John Ngu Foncha's K.N.D.P. would likewise rise to political
preeminence. Consequently the making of
modern Cameroon, the reunification of former German Kamerun after more than 40
years of French and British rule over a divided Cameroon, would be directed by
two men—Ahidjo and Foncha—and their respective political parties.
The
French colonial political structures in Cameroun were inherited by Ahmadou Ahidjo,
who meticulously put his own distinctive stamp on them. Ahidjo's Cameroon was administered by a state
apparatus that he created, and modeled upon a system characterized by Crawford
Young as "the unitary Bonarpatist doctrines of France." Since the president was himself ill-educated
and therefore ill-prepared for undertaking this rather awesome task on his own
initiative, it is likely that the French assisted him in shaping the contours
of the political system over which he would preside. Ahidjo's new State was hegemonic but, as long
as significant segments of the country acknowledged his supremacy and rendered
deference to central authority, they were allowed to pursue their own
agendas. Thus, influential traditional
rulers were unchallenged in their local domains, the powerful local Roman
Catholic Church left undisturbed, and the industrious class of ambitious
Bamileke merchants allowed to garner huge profits from their trading
activities.
Ahidjo
had the opportunity of transforming his multi-ethnic polity of tribes people of
more than two hundred ethnic groups into a nation-state, imbuing in his
countrymen with a strong sense of belonging to a nation that transcended ethic
and tribal proclivities. But Ahidjo’s
primary concern was not to convert Cameroonian tribes people to
nationalists. That was Ruben Um Nyobe's
task--the UPC (Union des Populations du
Cameroun) leader who Ahidjo and his French masters had eliminated in
September 1958. Besides, Ahidjo was a
political leader and not a visionary or prophet. And the French colonial masters definitely
did not want a leader who would make Cameroonians out of tribesmen. Hence they settled for Ahidjo, who either
sought, or was instructed, to increase his own personal power. Accordingly, Ahidjo constructed a state
apparatus that consisted of the government, a single party, and a police state
structure, including an elaborate institutional network of professional and
political apparatchiks--a politico-administrative class loyal to him. This group of individuals was charged with
the responsibility of managing the affairs of the state under Ahidjo’s
personal, direct supervision.
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The
Ahidjo regime was highly centralized in Yaounde, the nation’s capital city.
From that center of power, Ahidjo made all appointments of ministers,
governors, prefects, directors, etc. All
high-ranking positions in the government, party, parliament, and the
bureaucracy were rewards Ahidjo personally bestowed upon mostly qualified
Cameroonians whom he deemed loyal and supportive of his regime. The formula for expediting these rewards was
"ethnic/regional representation" in the political institutions of the
country. Professor Kofele-Kale refers this
formula as "ethnic arithmetic" and explains that "in reality it
was a sophisticated patronage system through which ethnic groups were
transformed into pressure groups with the responsibility of articulating,
aggregating and resolving particularistic interests and demands."
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